I don't deny that there is quite a lot of hard to swallow stuff in the Bible. I have in the past dealt with each issue raised (AndyRegs - do you happen to have the reply I sent to you about the offering daughters to an angry mob thing? Because I can NOT be bothered to work through that again!), but it seems when given an answer for one bit, people just hunt desperately for the next... if there was, say, 3 passages that you really struggled with and if you knew the answer you'd consider the possibility there was a God I might be more inclined, but with all due respect the attitude you are coming from is, "I've made up my mind, and here are a few nasty difficult bits of the Bible to prove it"! So, allow me to make a few general points that I hope you will bear in mind when reading these passages.
1) Back to cherry-picking for an instant: I honestly believe that with the right attitude and study, there is something useful to come out of all pieces of the Bible. However, it isn't necessarily a "moral point" as you say because the Bible isn't just a "moral code". Because of this, a relatively obscure point can require a lot of "work" to uncover; you could read a whole grisly story and learn one thing, or learn hundreds of things from a few passages of certain parts of the OT. I don't think it's deliberate, deceptive cherry picking to focus on the latter, i think it's common sense. I love delving into the grit of the OT, but I'm perhaps in a minority, which is why you don't tend to hear people preaching about them to the masses - they're reserved for smaller, more dedicated study groups - but they're not ignored.
2) The Bible is full of self-referencing. Much of what is said in the NT is in some way referencing or echoing the OT, if it wasn't for that, we wouldn't know Jesus was infact claiming to be God when he very deliberately says something which mimicks how God refers to himself in the OT. Without that knowledge of Jewish history (which is effectively what the OT is), that would be lost on a modern day reader. Hence, some of the OT is necessary even if it doesn't seem to make an obvious point standing alone, because of the way it sets up for the NT.
3) Attitude counts! We're not only told that we should read the Bible, but how - i.e. humbly, and with a prayer that God would use it to reveal himself to us. Christians (as perhaps several religions, I don't know) don't just see it as a textbook, we see it as something "living" - you're not only reading the words God has written through inspiring someone thousands of years ago, but he is helping you to understand it. Given this, if from the beginning you are setting out to disprove or knock down God in your own mind or that of others, the Bible will be almost opaque to you. It's like going to see a film you might otherwise have enjoyed after hearing a witty, negative review.
4) With regard to being "righteous" - I'm not sure that, discounting the obvious, there is one man in the Bible who is described all the way through as being totally good, sinless etc. Most of the "Biblical heroes" fall at some point; they either started rubbish, do something rubbish or end up rubbish. I think it is a slightly weak point to be honest to say "ooh, look at this, God says he's righteous but he got drunk!" There are men and women today who I would describe as "Godly", certainly more so than me, but I don't for one second believe that they don't do bad things too! There's a difference between saying someone is trying hard to live right for God, and saying someone is good enough to get into heaven on their own (ie. perfect) - the latter does not exist. Therefore, we see throughout the Bible that God uses children, cowards, fishermen, outcasts etc. and accomplishes amazing things with them, despite their flaws. And the message is perfectly clear - don't think that because you are not perfect or some high authority that God can't use you in a powerful way. What's so bad about that?
5) I will pick up on just a couple of direct points to finish off: the faeces thing. This isn't just a vulgar threat, "do this and I'll rub cr*p in your face", the priests he is speaking to have been ignoring God and leading the people astray, something God sees as a very serious problem throughout the Bible (even in the NT there is some pretty strong stuff about those who "lead his children astray" - I don't relish this thought but I hope Dawkins understands the gravity of his situation if he is wrong...). The sacrifices they are giving to him are therefore an insult, paying lip-service to one thing whilst doing another. He is basically saying "I'll throw the rubbish of your sacrifices back in your faces." The Jewish faith is very physical - showing you are repentant by wearing sackcloth and ashes, eating this, not eating that, washing this a certain number of times - these things can seem bizarre or unpleasant compared to our sanitised lives, but are perfectly relevant to the culture of the time. I don't think means the message is lost whatsoever - don't try to tell God you're doing one thing and do another!
Secondly, I want to clear up the heritage of Jesus which you raise before you even get there! I don't quite understand the ins and outs here, but I understand the principle - basically, there are two ways of tracing lineage - there's a "royal lineage" and a "blood lineage" - you may be a descendent of a royal line without your parents actually being king and queen, or something like that. The saviour of the race is foretold to come from "the line of David", ie. the royal line, which he does, but there's also some other thing that Jesus' heritage fulfills too which I can't for the life of me remember - but basically his blood lineage fulfills that one. Bonus. That's why, when you would expect Matthew to get right into the story of the birth, he starts with the boring list of ancestors - because it would have been vital for the Jews of that time to know, and they would have immediately recognised the significance.
I'm sorry these posts are so long guys - I hope you have the patience to go through them steadily, I'm certainly doing the same in return. I know I may appear to be dominating the thread somewhat but as the only person arguing from a "religious" stance, I feel I have to hold my own!
